In particular, modified public creator and destructor function names,
added a display destroy listener, safely extract user data from
resources, send correct time (in usecs) in rootston, etc.
This is a common interface that can be used for all primary selection
protocols, as discussed in [1]. A new function wlr_seat_set_primary_selection
is added to set the primary selection for all protocols.
The seat now owns again the source, and resets the selection to NULL when
destroyed.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1367#issuecomment-442403454
This commits completely refactors wlr_gtk_primary_selection. The goal is to
remove gtk-primary-selection state from the seat and better handle inert
resources where it makes sense.
wlr_seat_client.primary_selection_devices has been removed and replaced by
wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device. This allows us to make offers inert when the
current selection is replaced.
wlr_seat_set_primary_selection has been removed because it relied on wlr_seat
instead of wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager. A new function,
wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager_set_selection (candidate for the
longest function name in wlroots) has been added. It doesn't take a serial
anymore as serial checking only makes sense for set_selection requests coming
from Wayland clients (serial checking is now done in the Wayland interface
implementation).
Since wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager is now required to set the
selection, a new function wlr_xwayland_set_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager
(candidate number two for longest function name) has been added.
Devices are now made inert when the seat goes away.
Future work includes removing the last primary selection bits from the seat,
mainly wlr_seat.primary_selection_source and wlr_seat.events.primary_selection,
replacing those with new fields in wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device. Or maybe
we could keep those in the seat and replace them with a re-usable interface
(for future zwp_primary_selection_v1 support). We need to think how we'll sync
these three protocols (GTK, X11 and wayland-protocols).
See https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1388
wlr_subsurface_from_wlr_surface can return NULL if the wl_surface is still
alive and if the wl_subsurface has been destroyed. Make sure we check for NULL.
Fixes https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/3195
This commit makes it possible for a single client to have multiple data devices
for the same seat. This fixes issues with Firefox.
This mainly removes wlr_data_source.offer. We make sure we create one data
offer per device. We now make the offer inert when the source is destroyed.
Fixes the second half of https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1041
The read format is dependent on the output, so we first need to make it
current. This fixes a race condition in wlr-screencopy-v1 where a dmabuf
client would cause EGL_NO_SURFACE to be bound at the time when
screencopy needs to query for the preferred format, causing GL errors.
When a client was creating multiple data devices for the same seat, we were
only creating one resource. This is a protocol error.
Instead, create one offer per data device.
This commit also makes offers inert when their source is destroyed.
Fixes part of https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1041
Supersedes https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/1113
The renderer redesign is going to need the render fd before the backend
is fully started, so we have to move the wl registry code to when the
backend is created instead of when it is started.
We also need to stash the wl_keyboard and emit it to library users
later, once they've added their listeners and started the backend.
We were assuming GL_BGRA_EXT was always supported.
We now check that it's supported for rendering. We fail if it isn't because
this format is specified as "always supported" by the Wayland protocol.
We also check if it's supported for reading pixels. A new preferred_read_format
function returns the preferred format that can be used to read pixels. This is
used by the screencopy protocol.
There was a missing copy_drm_surface_mgpu call in drm_connector_schedule_frame
so we asked for a pageflip with an unknown BO, resulting in ENOENT.
Additionally, this commit makes schedule_frame return a bool indicating
failures. This allows schedule_frame_handle_idle_timer to only set
frame_pending to true if a frame has been successfully scheduled. Thus, if a
pageflip fails, rendering won't be blocked forever anymore.
In case a pageflip is already pending, true is returned because a frame has
already been scheduled and will be sent sometime soon.
shm_open is a POSIX function creating an in-memory file. Using it simplifies
the code and removes the dependency on XDG_RUNTIME_DIR. The only downside is
that we need to generate a random name for the shm file.
If a client uses an older version of the dmabuf protocol, use the
`formats` event instead of `modifiers` (since that didn't exist in older
versions).
With a bit of necessary guessing, support dmabuf importing even when
EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_import_modifiers isn't present instead of
failing up front.
The compositor acts as a relay between applications using the text-input protocol and input methods using the input-method protocol.
This change implements the basic but useful support for input-method, leaving out grabs as well as popups.
Since the source doesn't always come from a client, this field
doesn't make sense. It is replaced by a new "finalized" field in
wlr_client_data_source. This is used to make sure set_actions is
not sent after start_drag has been sent.
A check in data_offer_choose_action has been removed: if an offer
has been sent then start_drag has been called, no need to check.
I also wanted to add a check for wl_data_source.offer, but it
turns out (1) this isn't in the spec (2) it breaks GTK+.
This is some preliminary work for Firefox on Wayland compatibility.
This desynchronizes our rendering loop with the vblank cycle.
In case a compositor doesn't swap buffers but schedules a frame,
emitting a frame event immediately enters a busy-loop.
Instead, ask the backend to send a frame when appropriate. On
Wayland we can just register a frame callback on our surface. On
DRM we can do a no-op pageflip.
Fixes#617Fixesswaywm/sway#2748
This calculates and returns the effective damage of the surface in
surface coordinates, including the client damage (in buffer
coordinates), and damage induced by resize or move events.
When a pageflip is pending, we'll get a DRM event for the connector
in the future. We don't want to free the connector immediately
otherwise we'll use-after-free in the pageflip handler.
This commit adds a new state, "DISAPPEARED". This asks the pageflip
handler to destroy the output after it's done pageflipping.
Originally I asumed tilt_x and tilt_y are very unlikely to change
independent, I was proven wrong.
And while investigating Krita not using the Erasor tool, I found a bug,
which is unrelated though.
* Rename the constraint_create signal to new_constraint for
consistency
* Move the constraint_destroy signal to the constraint itself
* Use rotate_child_position instead of duplicating logic
* Fix inert constraint resource handling
* Style fixes
Sessions can now be retrieved from a backend in a more general manner.
Multi-backend gets back its `session` field that contains the session
if one was created, removing the interfacing from multi backend with the
drm backend directly. This adds the possibility to use sessions even
without the drm backend.
It additionally fixes the bug that 2 session objects got created when
WLR_BACKENDS were set to "libinput,drm".
To allow vt switching without drm backend (and drm fd) on logind, start
listening to PropertiesChanged signals from dbus and parse the session
"Active" property when no master fd was created (this does not change
current drm backend behaviour in any way).
To prevent wl_keyboard keymap being written to by clients, use a unique
file descriptor for each wl_keyboard resource.
Reference: weston, commit 76829fc4eaea329d2a525c3978271e13bd76c078
This commit allows outputs that need a CRTC to steal it from
user-disabled outputs. Note that in the case there are enough
CRTCs, disabled outputs don't loose it (so there's no modeset
and plane initialization needed after DPMS). CRTC allocation
still prefers to keep the old configuration, even if that means
allocating an extra CRTC to a disabled output.
CRTC reallocation now happen when enabling/disabling an output as
well as when trying to modeset. When enabling an output without a
CRTC, we realloc to try to steal a CRTC from a disabled output
(that doesn't really need the CRTC). When disabling an output, we
try to give our CRTC to an output that needs one. Modesetting is
similar to enabling.
A new DRM connector field has been added: `desired_enabled`.
Outputs without CRTCs get automatically disabled. This field keeps
track of the state desired by the user, allowing to automatically
re-enable outputs when a CRTC becomes free.
This required some changes to the allocation algorithm. Previously,
the algorithm tried to keep the previous configuration even if a
new configuration with a better score was possible (it only changed
configuration when the old one didn't work anymore). This is now
changed and the old configuration (still preferred) is only
retained without considering new possibilities when it's perfect
(all outputs have CRTCs).
User-disabled outputs now have `possible_crtcs` set to 0, meaning
they can only retain a previous CRTC (not acquire a new one). The
allocation algorithm has been updated to do not bump the score
when assigning a CRTC to a disabled output.
sx, sy used to store the buffer offset of the drag surface which was
then be added (by rootston) to the drag icon position.
Buffer offsets are handled already in surface_intersect_output
(output.c) so they were added twice for dnd surfaces.
This commit handles better situations in which the number of
connected outputs is greater than the number of available CRTCs.
It'll enable as many outputs as possible, and transfer CRTCs to
outputs that need one on unplug.
This changes CRTC and plane reallocation to happen after scanning
DRM connectors instead of on modeset.
This cleanups CRTCs and planes on unplug to allow them to be
re-used for other outputs.
On modeset, if an output doesn't have a CRTC, the desired mode is
saved and used later when the output gains a CRTC.
Future work includes giving priority to enabled outputs over
disabled ones for CRTC allocation. This requires the compositor to
know about all outputs (even outputs without CRTCs) to properly
modeset outputs enabled in the compositor config file and disable
outputs disabled in the config file.
This is so we can potentially add comments to it, and so if a user looks
at the installed header, they can see the /* #undef WLR_HAS_FEATURE */
line to see every option, even if not available.
Implement the tablet-v2 tablet tool's implicit grab semantics for
buttons and tip.
This avoids losing focus (to other [sub]surfaces) when a button is held,
or the tip is down.
This should help when the device is used close to a surface's border and
would otherwise have to be very precise.
This introduces -DWLR_USE_UNSTABLE and adds information regarding the
stability status to all headers. I started with a conservative set of
headers to mark as stable:
- types/wlr_matrix.h
- util/edges.h
- util/log.h
- util/region.h
- xcursor.h
Whenever a new surface is created, we have to update the cursor focus,
even if there's no input event. So, we generate one motion event, and
reuse the code to update the proper cursor focus. We need to do this
for all surface roles - toplevels, popups, subsurfaces.
Fixes#1162
153f37bdf5 (#1145) removed the
wlr_xwayland_is_unamanged function while fixing OR, because it was
belieived that it's supposed to work around the broken OR handling.
This was a misunderstanding. is_unmanaged is (while sort of a hack)
intended to work around inherent differences between "real" X sessions
and our Xwayland/wayland situation.
The main reason it exists is to support applications like rofi and dzen,
while not handing focus to other OR windows (which should *not* be
required).
Traditionally, these applications just grabbed input from X and didn't
need to be focused by any logic in the WM. Which of course doesn't work
in wayland compositors. So we have to give them focus in some way.
Giving *every* OR window focus, breaks other applications that don't
expect focus to change.
A testcase that was pointed out to me where wlr_xwayland_is_unamanged was
breaking things is https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/2128 (syncplay,
gitk, gitgui)
Supposedly it broke using keyboard to navigate the menus.
I can't reproduce this with this patch. The popups can be navigated as
long as the parent has focus.
Implement the basic logic for tablet-v2 tablet_pad's grabs. And plug in
the default grab.
Features like "holding" the focus should be implemented via grabs, like
they are for pointer and keyboard.
The override_redirect flag can change on configure notify and
on map notify. This adds an event to know when it changes.
This removes wlr_xwayland_surface_is_unmanaged which was wrongly
using the window type to decide whether the view should be
unmanaged.
A similar patch was proposed to Weston, but has never been
merged upstream [1].
[1]: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/211161/
There were a few issues after rebase, that the merge algorithm didn't
throw at my face:
wlr_output did a check on the actual role, not a string anymore, so that
had to go to allow tablet-v2 to set cursor surfaces.
A few L_DEBUG/L_ERRORs were still around
There was a user-after-free in tablet-group free()ing, probably after
insufficient testing from a previous feedback pass
The previous naming was based on the input-device capability names from
libinput.
With code that uses the libinput_tablet_tool and mapping into tablet-v2,
this is confusing, so the name is changed to follow the names used in
the protocol.
This adds the management code to manage tablet tools lifetimes from
libinput.
It follows the suggestion made in the tablet-unstable-v2.xml to destroy
tablet_tools once all tablets that it got into contact with were removed
from the system. This is implemented via a refcount.
If a tool is *not* unique, it will be destroyed on proximity out. This
is libinput specific and mentioned in libinput docs that tools will not
be found again, so we shouldn't keep a reference to them.
Also they can't be on other tablets as well, because they cannot be
tracked.
The naming in this commit is a bit off (to not break things).
The wlr names stay the same, tablet_tool is the libinput_device with
capaiblity LIBINPUT_DEVICE_CAP_TABLET_TOOL which is more akin to
"tablet" in the tablet-unstable-v2 protocol.
The struct that corresponds to the tablet_tool in tablet-unstable-v2 is
called tablet_tool_tool, a rename should be done at some point in the
future.
To begin with, no-op updates are unnecessary, so this patch is an
improvement on its own.
Then, this fixes hotplugging issues with xwayland. xwayland waits
for both wl_output and xdg_output to send a "done" event. However,
it doesn't handle well desynchronized "done" updates: if xdg-output
sends "done" twice, the second one will wait for the next wl_output
"done" event. This is an issue when the first is a no-op and the
second is a real update: the second isn't applied. I've considered
patching xwayland instead, but it seems pretty complicated.
It is common to want to iterate an xdg-surface's popups separately from
the toplevel and subsurfaces. For example, popups are typically rendered
on top of most other surfaces.
wlr_xdg_surface_for_each_surface continues to iterate both surfaces and
popups to maintain backwards compatibility.
There was no way to tell wlr_idle to stop processing input events
and rearm timers all the time, such an API is required to have
some form of idle inhibitor.
Detecting whether eglSwapBuffersWithDamageEXT or
eglSwapBuffersWithDamageKHR is used should be based on the extension
string, not only on the availability of the function.
This lets clients bind to a seat multiple times by re-using the existing
wlr_seat_client whenever a duplicate request happens.
Previously, an independant wlr_seat_client would be created and only
events from one would be processed.
Fixes#1023.
This function is unimplemented and is redundant because all devices added
with roots_seat_add_device get destruction handlers assigned already.
This fixes issue #998.
Compositors now have more control over how the backend creates its
renderer. Currently all backends create an EGL/GLES2 renderer, so
the necessary attributes for creating the context are passed to a
user-provided callback function. It is responsible for initializing
provided wlr_egl and to return a renderer. On fail, return 0.
Fixes#987
Makes the xwayland startup process two phased.
The first phase just initialises the X11 sockets.
The second phase starts the Xwayland server itself.
When starting xwayland lazily the second phase will be postponed until
a client has connected to the X11 socket.
Changes in behaviour:
The DISPLAY environment is now set immediately after the X11 sockets
are created.
When the Xwayland server is killed or crashes, the sockets will not be
recreated, but reused.
Fixes#849: Start up Xwayland lazily
This changes the `wlr_output_impl.set_cursor` function to take a
`wlr_texture` instead of a byte buffer. This simplifies the
DRM and Wayland backends since they were creating textures from
the byte buffer anyway.
With this commit, performance should be improved when moving the
cursor since outputs don't need to be re-rendered anymore.
Some comboboxes (e.g. in chrome://flags) are advertized as…
Notifications of course! Yeah, notifications, the thing that
tells you you have mail, your battery is low, or the dog has
eaten your carpet. This isn't the first time we notice Chromium's
X11 backend is pretty shit.
Anyway, added notifications and splash screens to the list of
unmanaged windows. Also removed utility windows because those
should be managed, but maybe I'm wrong and I'll revert this.
All public resource creators now take a new ID for the resource
and an optional list where the resource link is added. When the
resource is destroyed it is its own responsibility to remove
itself from the list. This removes the need for the caller to add
a destroy listener.
This commit fixes a few segfaults with resources not removed from
the list when destroyed.
handle_x11_event() and x11_handle_input_event() react to different kinds
of events, so it does not make much of a difference if
x11_handle_input_event() signals if it handled an event or not.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
The motivation for this is:
- `get_popup` and `get_toplevel` allocate role-specific resources.
- On the first non-null commit, the surface gets mapped.
- On a null commit, the surface gets unmapped. It can be mapped
again with a non-null commit.
- When the role object (xdg-toplevel or xdg-popup) is
destroyed, the surface is unmapped and role-specific resources
are destroyed. The client can call `get_popup` or `get_toplevel`
again on that surface.
- When the xdg-surface object is destroyed, the surface is
unmapped, role-specific resources are destroyed and the surface
itself is destroyed.
It was broken because the damage extents were rotated about its
own center, not about the center of the surface.
This adds a new wlr_region_rotated_bounds that rotates regions.
This allows us to have only one code path (for both non-rotated
views and rotated views) and optimizes rendering for rotated
views.
- Textures are now immutable (apart from those created from raw
pixels), no more invalid textures
- Move all wl_drm stuff in wlr_renderer
- Most of wlr_texture fields are now private
- Remove some duplicated DMA-BUF code in the DRM backend
- Add more assertions
- Stride is now always given as bytes rather than pixels
- Drop wl_shm functions
Fun fact: this patch has been written 10,000 meters up in the air.
==12021==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x617000015698 at pc 0x7f1a9abe1c09 bp 0x7ffe9068f6b0 sp 0x7ffe9068f6a0
WRITE of size 4 at 0x617000015698 thread T0
#0 0x7f1a9abe1c08 in pointer_handle_leave ../backend/wayland/wl_seat.c:40
#1 0x7f1a96ae7d1d in ffi_call_unix64 (/lib64/libffi.so.6+0x5d1d)
#2 0x7f1a96ae768e in ffi_call (/lib64/libffi.so.6+0x568e)
#3 0x7f1a988e0d8a (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x8d8a)
#4 0x7f1a988dd927 (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x5927)
#5 0x7f1a988debe3 in wl_display_dispatch_queue_pending (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x6be3)
#6 0x7f1a9abdd6d6 in dispatch_events ../backend/wayland/backend.c:28
#7 0x7f1a9a968c11 in wl_event_loop_dispatch (/lib64/libwayland-server.so.0+0x9c11)
#8 0x7f1a9a967449 in wl_display_run (/lib64/libwayland-server.so.0+0x8449)
#9 0x418dff in main ../rootston/main.c:81
#10 0x7f1a99b5ef29 in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x20f29)
#11 0x4057c9 in _start (/home/shared/wayland/wlroots/build/rootston/rootston+0x4057c9)
0x617000015698 is located 664 bytes inside of 696-byte region [0x617000015400,0x6170000156b8)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f1a9af754b8 in __interceptor_free (/lib64/libasan.so.4+0xde4b8)
#1 0x7f1a9abe01ee in wlr_wl_output_destroy ../backend/wayland/output.c:194
#2 0x7f1a9ac12918 in wlr_output_destroy ../types/wlr_output.c:299
#3 0x7f1a9abe061b in xdg_toplevel_handle_close ../backend/wayland/output.c:255
#4 0x7f1a96ae7d1d in ffi_call_unix64 (/lib64/libffi.so.6+0x5d1d)
#5 0x7f1a96ae768e in ffi_call (/lib64/libffi.so.6+0x568e)
#6 0x7f1a988e0d8a (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x8d8a)
#7 0x7f1a988dd927 (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x5927)
#8 0x7f1a988debe3 in wl_display_dispatch_queue_pending (/lib64/libwayland-client.so.0+0x6be3)
#9 0x7f1a9abdd6d6 in dispatch_events ../backend/wayland/backend.c:28
#10 0x7f1a9a968c11 in wl_event_loop_dispatch (/lib64/libwayland-server.so.0+0x9c11)
#11 0x7f1a9a967449 in wl_display_run (/lib64/libwayland-server.so.0+0x8449)
#12 0x418dff in main ../rootston/main.c:81
#13 0x7f1a99b5ef29 in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x20f29)
#14 0x4057c9 in _start (/home/shared/wayland/wlroots/build/rootston/rootston+0x4057c9)
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f1a9af75a38 in __interceptor_calloc (/lib64/libasan.so.4+0xdea38)
#1 0x7f1a9abe0703 in wlr_wl_output_create ../backend/wayland/output.c:272
#2 0x7f1a9abdd8eb in wlr_wl_backend_start ../backend/wayland/backend.c:55
#3 0x7f1a9abbeb49 in wlr_backend_start ../backend/backend.c:28
#4 0x7f1a9abd8ce1 in multi_backend_start ../backend/multi/backend.c:24
#5 0x7f1a9abbeb49 in wlr_backend_start ../backend/backend.c:28
#6 0x418c32 in main ../rootston/main.c:58
#7 0x7f1a99b5ef29 in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x20f29)
#8 0x4057c9 in _start (/home/shared/wayland/wlroots/build/rootston/rootston+0x4057c9)
Allow to set the texture target type when generating/binding the
texture. This allows us to attach the texture type to the texture so we
don't have to keep the logic elsewhere.
Tested with
./weston-simple-dmabuf-drm
./weston-simple-dmabuf-drm --import-immediate=1
./weston-simple-dmabuf-drm --y-inverted=1
(and combinations)
Supports only single plane XRGB dmabufs for now.